You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Copy link
Report message
Show original message
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to efloraofindia
Thanks a lot, Santhan ji
---------- Forwarded message --------- From: Ponnutheerthagiri Santhan<ponsa...@gmail.com> Date: Mon, 2 Mar 2026 at 06:18 Subject: Re: [efloraofindia:486266] FOR ID :: Dicots :: The Nilgiris :: Jan 29, 2026 · 11:11 AM IST To: J.M. Garg <jmg...@gmail.com>
Elaeocarpus glandulosus Wall. ex Merr., Bikki, fruit pericarp edible.
Thanks & regards
Dr. Santhan P
Industrial R&D expert, Plant taxonomist
Author of the Books "Trees of our Life" (Botany, Chemistry, Medicine),
You do not have permission to delete messages in this group
Copy link
Report message
Show original message
Either email addresses are anonymous for this group or you need the view member email addresses permission to view the original message
to indian...@googlegroups.com, Santhan P, DineshValke
I was confused between two species (E.glandulosus and E.variabilis) and went further and found as below from Google AI:
Elaeocarpus variabilis (South Indian Marble Tree), endemic to the Western Ghats, was previously confused with E. glandulosus, a distinct species found in northern India and dry Sri Lanka. E. variabilis is characterized by reddish young leaves, purple branchlets/petioles, and 1-seeded elliptic fruits, whereas E. glandulosus refers to a different northern species
Key Distinctions and Relationships:
Taxonomic Revision:Elaeocarpus variabilis Zmarzty was established to describe specimens previously misidentified as E. glandulosus (sensu auctt.) or E. oblongus.
Elaeocarpus glandulosus: The name E. glandulosus Wall. ex Merr. is now properly applied to a species found in northern India and dry parts of Sri Lanka.
Habitat: Endemic to the Western Ghats (Southern India).
Appearance: Features purple, warty branchlets, long-pointed leaves that turn red when young, and racemes with purple stalks.
Flowers: White, with laciniate (frilly) petals and anthers that are neither bearded nor awned.
Fruit: Ellipsoid drupe, approximately
.
Differences: The primary difference is geographical and taxonomic; E. variabilis is the southern Western Ghats species formerly wrongly called E. glandulosus